ROME (CWNews.com/Fides) - Flooding on the Amazon River in
Brazil has left 20,000 homeless and five people, including
a four-year-old boy, dead following months of unprecedented
rains. Aid workers in the Brazilian town of Laranjal do
Jari, at the mouth of the Amazon River have issued a
desperate plea for help.

As world media concentrated on Brazil's celebrations
marking the 500th anniversary since its discovery by
Europeans and discussions about past violence against the
native Indians, little attention has been paid to the
gravity of the disaster which struck right in the Amazon
region, the Indians' homeland.

Laranjal do Jari (Amapa) has a population of about 50,000,
half living in riverside dwellings along the Amazon, which
because of torrential rainfall rose by over 2 meters,
flooding the poor homesteads and destroying the caboclos
(homes of Indians who move to towns). The flooding began
before Easter and the water level still continues to rise.

Father Aleandro Castrese, PIME, who has served in Brazil
for the past five years, said he has no idea what to do:
"Thousands have lost everything, they have no food. Our
churches, at some distance from the waterfront, are now
havens for hundreds of flood victims." Father Castrese
spent Holy Week celebrating the various rites in the
different churches and using his jeep to carry people to
safety on higher ground. He himself is convalescing from a
road accident in which he fractured a leg.

Because of the high water level, roads are flooded and even
the jeep cannot pass. People are moved using fragile boats.
Homes, churches, shops, and discos are used as night time
refuges.

"The most edifying thing is the generous hospitality among
the people," the missionary said. "Those with a safe home
readily take in others, the poor help the poor. And all
this while the political leaders discuss matters of
responsibility, thinking of the electoral gains assistance
may bring."

Meanwhile Father Castrese and another priest are nailing
wooden planks to the floor to raise it: the water is
ankle-level but could rise. "In the future, homes and
churches must be built much higher, and of more resistant
wood: most of our chapels rot in the water. But at the
moment food and clothing are the priority: these people
have lost everything," he said.

Fides, the news service of the Vatican's Congregation for
the Propagation of the Faith, has set up a mail drop for
charitable donations to assist the afflicted. Aid or funds,
marked "Amazon Floods," can be sent to:
Fides International Agency
Via di Propaganda l/c
00187 Rome
Italy